Like an engineer using a CAD program, understanding how a figure can be transformed allows you to manipulate it by sliding, flipping, turning, or resizing it. One way to practice this skill is to start with a figure, follow some instructions to transform it, and then draw the resulting figure. This can be done using plain paper, graphing paper, or a software program. Regardless of what technique you use, the important parts of the transformation need to be visualized mentally first.
Let's try a glide reflection which is a translation and a reflection. Take out a blank sheet of paper. Follow the instructions in the slideshow below.
Step 1Fold the paper horizontally and then vertically. When you open it up, you should have a paper with four quadrants like the one shown below. Label the x and y axes along with quadrant numbers counterclockwise.
Step 2In the upper left quadrant (quadrant 2), draw a right triangle.
Step 3Flip the triangle over the y-axis. Think about what flipping the triangle does to the triangle. What direction does "over the y-axis" indicate? Is it a flip from left to right OR a flip from top to bottom? What should the result look like? Visualize this for your triangle and then draw it.
Step 4Slide the triangle down so that it ends up in the lower right quadrant. What type of transformation is a slide? How should the resulting triangle look? Where on the paper should it be?
ConclusionNow you see how visualizing the transformation works. First, we formed a mental picture by asking questions at each step of the transformation; then we drew a picture. This visualization technique is often used by architects, designers, animators, and engineers to build very complex structures made from manipulating figures and shapes. |